Switzerland could end up on G20 tax blacklist
French President Nicolas Sarkozy said on Sunday he had not ruled out that Switzerland would be placed on a tax haven blacklist by 20 of the world's largest economies.
"Based on the actual state of things and on the rules, it could be, yes," Sarkozy said when asked whether Switzerland met the criteria for an uncooperative tax haven set by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
German Chancellor Angela Merkel sounded more conciliatory regarding a possible resolution.
"So far I don't have a concrete idea about such a list," she told reporters in Brussels. "But I think the better we are in talks with each other the smaller the likelihood of such a list."
The Swiss Bankers Association described Sarkozy's comments as "sickening hypocrisy", adding: "The only name on the list that Mr Sarkozy seems capable of pronouncing is Switzerland."
Swiss President Hans Rudolf-Merz has said the country may need to make some concessions in banking secrecy, while Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey has said Switzerland is open to negotiations on the issue.
Leaders of the G20 will discuss the issue of tax havens when they meet in London in April. The G20 comprises countries and developing countries including China, India and Brazil. Switzerland was not invited to the meeting.
In a poll published by the German-language SonntagsBlick tabloid, 56 per cent of respondents said they favoured the Swiss government cooperating with foreign authorities on tax issues. One-third was opposed.




Comments
Except in cases where there might be strong indications that money was transferred illegally, I would say... stick to your guns, Switzerland!
And will the G20 include themselves on their Tax Haven Blacklist where it applies. I think not. For Example UK with Jersey, Guernsey, Gibraltar and Isle of Man; USA with the Caymen Islands, and I am sure there are others but am not sure enough of my facts to quote them. This just stinks of governments who all too often cannot manage their own affairs and deflect attention from their failing by hypocritically attacking others who successfully manage what they cannot.
On the other hand . . . will M. Sarkozy consider introducing Democracy into his country so that the French People can have a real say in how their tax money is spent, rather than having it determined by a clique of self-serving professional politicians??